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Page 25 text:
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SCIENCE We won Victory through science-the atomic bomb, radar-and we're looking forward to a better world because of science. There are many fields to choose from in the intriguing study of science. Whether it is biology, physics, chemistry, or physi- ology, an interesting program of study will be found at Central. Along with the regular textbook material, we delve into the mysteries of bugs, pow- ders, and perhaps materials used in the discovery of the atomic bomb. Mr. G. C. Sayre adiusts the projection microscrope, a new machine now in the science department. The interested bystanders are Miss Margaret Pollock, Miss Susan Lovald, John H. Steele, and Miss Florence Klaus. ' gam5Zeafde,4-Jam! Dick Hoff and Dick E. Todd put together their equipment while other members of the class busy themselves with the experiment in chemistry.
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Page 24 text:
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SOCIAL SCIENCE Centralites of today have come to learn the importance of knowing about world events, because members of their families or friends fought for the peace in strange, maybe unheard-of places. World War ll has made us conscious of the importance of having a knowledge of our foreign neighbors. We obtain this knowledge through outside reading, current events, and the use of magazines and newspapers. Our social science department, in- cluding history, sociology, and econo- mics, helps us understand the problems of today. t n Leonard Gagnon, ex-Army captain, on returning from Germany seems to be happy to renew his work in the social science department with Miss Maybelle Hoyt, Miss Margaret Adam, and W. C. Simmons. , y 5 41, ,L li ef .1 ,gQ.,.. - Q ui - A -a:,.l 'E' ,,,,...-f-A These social science teachers, Miss Gladys Chatman, Mrs. Eva B. Kimball H E Wilkins, and Max Houghton are helping us to learn how to live with everyone on the globe. y 7 a ' E We the people -history students write, as they copy the Constitution charts.
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Page 26 text:
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MATH Have you seen some Cen- tralites working very hard on something that looked like Greek to you? lt might have been Greek, but more likely it was a math problem. Cen- tral offers many good math courses. Algebra, plane geo- metry, and trigonometry are part of the curriculum. Math classes have prepared the boys and girls to meet the war needs, to say nothing of aiding in computing those in- come taxes we expect to have in the future. Miss Marian Maio tri- sects an angle for Jer- ome V. Benson, and Lee M. Taylor. Leslie Luder, ex-marine, with the help of John Oltmcnns explains o problem to the class 22
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